serving edmonton
daily
VOL. LVI, No. 26, UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA,
The Gateway
EDMONTON, ALBERTA
since yesterday
TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1966, FOUR PAGES
I DON’T CARE HOW THEY SPELL IT IN THE JOURNAL .
Gateway was prepared Monday four of the more photogenic staffers were culled from the
hundreds at the print shop to check final page proofs with Wiebe Huisman, composition man
there. From left to right the staffers are Bill Miller, managing editor; Sheila Ballard, ace re-
Ls
; ia
hts
—Neil Driscoll photo
.—As the first daily
porter; Don Sellar, editor-in-chief; and Bryan Campbell, sports editor.
students’ affairs,’ he said,
further developments.”
He expressed fears that possibly
the revisions would pass the pro-
vincial legislature without suf-
ficient airing of the points of view
by all the parties concerne
Prof. Ryan addressed dents
council Monday. His remarks
about the University Act followed
a lively debate between himself
and Discipline, Interpretation and
Be Ae Board chairman
Brann: Schepanovich regarding
the jurisdiction of DIE
He suggested students’ council
make strong recommendations to
the provincial government regard-
ing the University Act.
“I feel the Deans’ Council and
leasing their recommendations all
the Governors have really done is
thrown the matter open to public
discussion,” he .said.
Lack of funds forces delay
in Student Means Survey “aah at
The Canada Student Means Sur-
vey is broke.
Another $50,000 is required to
complete the Beviect undertaken
more than a year ago by the
Canadian Union of Students in an
effort to reveal the financial bur-
den on Canada’s students.
The results of the survey and
preliminary analysis of the uni-
versity student section of the re-
port will be published Feb. 1 the
CUS ° national office announced
Friday
Several further reports are plan-
d, but these will be delayed until
Cus is able hed secure funds for
their complet
The oficial Ppidetied cost for
the statistical gathering was $32, 000
wit idizi
survey findings to forestall action
on fee increases at this university.
They contend the survey results
will enforce their ‘freeze the fees’
demand and have asked the uni-
versity to delay increases until all
the relevant facts are available.
The delay and extra expenses are
caused by problems in statistical
operating with CUS in the survey.
FUND RAISING
The CUS national office in
Ottawa has embarked on a fund
raising campaign to acquire the
money to complete the compiling
and analysis of the survey results.
Patrick Kenniff, CUS national
i students here.
on of Universities and Colleges
of Canada’s student aid committee vey were to
and imminent action in the educa- 1, 1965.
tional field by the new parliament.
The U of A section of the cross-
Canada survey was almost sabotag-
ed by the apathetic yee of
i
the selected students peapanded to
s finally obtained after
a assive Sacasna effort.
The complete results of the sur-
be available by June
A special students’ affairs section
should deal with the incorporation
of the students’ union as well as
the possible future incorporation of
any parallel students’ association,
such as the graduate students’
association.
_ why jurisdiction of the
transferred
from the Senate to ibe General
Faculty Council, Prof. Ryan replied
that the Senate had disowned stu-
dent affairs.
The Senate will now become a
ne-third of public forum for the broad dis-
cussion of ideas related to the
Ete ee e sai
Governors’ Moparts felt
ite Pesca Faculty Council was
the logical body to Lapale students’
affairs. However, other suggestions
are certainly in order, he said.
UGEC says McGill still in union
MONTREAL (CUP)—The co-ordinating commit-
tee of the Union Generale des Etudiants du Quebec
has ruled that MeGH is still a member in good stand-
ing of the unio:
The eee: was taken at a recent meeting, and
will remain in effect until a second referendum is
held at McGill to decide the stormy issue.
A first referendum taken last December .showed
53 per cent of those voting were opposed to McGill’s
membership in UGEQ.
The referendum was later ruled invalid by the
McGill students’ council, when ballots ran out at one
poll an hour before the poll was scheduled to close.
But McGill will not exercise any of its member-
ship rights in UGEQ until the pie nae referendum has
decided the issue.
Sharon Sholzberg, president of the McGill coun-
cil, had this to say about McGill’s status in the
organization:
“The negative feeling on the campus at the
moment does not allow us to participate actively in
UGEQ. Until my council is given a mandate to act
as responsible members of UGEQ, we will continue
in a passive role within the union.”
Commenting on the first referendum, Miss Sholz-
berg said she was disappointed in the results and
hoped all McGill students would get out and vote
in the next plebiscite, expected to be held next
onth.
Miss Sholzberg went on to charge that the leaders
of Hie anti-UGEQ forces at McGill were rightists.
some speeches I made they held u
uring p
' placards with the picture of Barry Goldwater,” she
= a claimed there was latent anti-feminism
mong many of her opposition, “who thought serious
Ehouskt and debate beyond the ken of a female.
Student cause
held neglected
Provost Ryan claims new act
should be ‘focus’ for future
By RALPH MELNYCHUK
University Provost A. A. Ryan expressed concern Monday
that student affairs have not received adequate attention in
the revision of the University Act.
“There should be a specific section of the Act dealing with
d, “which would act as a focus for
DIE, Ryan
clash over
discipline
clashed head-on Monday over dis-
cipline enforcement in residences.
University Provost A. A. Ryan
and Discipline Interpretation and
Enforcement Board Chairman
Branny Schepanovich tangled in a
lively debate at a students’ coun-
cil meeting.
The dispute erupted after DIE’s
Dec. 9 acquittal of an elected stu-
dent residence official on the
charge of acting against the prin-
ciples of good conduct and in the
student was involved in a liquor
raid in October.
Schepanovich contended that
since the episode occured on cam-
pus and since the charge was laid
specifically against the student as
a member of the students’ union,
DIE’s ruling was valid.
Professor Ryan contended that
the DIE by-laws were worded
poorly and might possibly read as
giving DIE powers it does not have.
“But the residence is the stu-
dents’ home, and as such a has
no jurisdiction there,” i
Ne Board should have noes
t > ”
Prof. Ryan also criticized DIE
eos for changes in
residence government.
rof. Ryan defended
government in the residen
“It is not perfect, but it néede
ey to develop,” he said.
ases of jurisdictional dispute
a as this imply irresponsibility
and may incline those in authority’
to look disfavorably on further
advances in student self-govern-
ment, he said.
“Communication with new stu-
dents is one of my major prob-
lems,” he said.
student
nce.
student handbook was
ard in setting up
government in residence, but I am
becoming exasperated,” he said.
Council passed a vote of con-
fidence in DIE. rof. Ryan cast
an honorary vote in favor of the.
motion.
The Gateway
Member of the Canadian University Press
Winner N. A. M. MacKenzie trophy for excellence in features 1965-66.
Star trophy for excellence in news photography 1965-66.
Winner Montreal
* Second in Bracken trophy com-
petition for editorial writing 1965-66 and third in Southam trophy competition for general
965-66.
excellence 1965-
Editor-in-Chief -
Managing Editor ............. . Bill Miller
News Editor .........0c00 Al Bromling
Asst. News Editor, ly Chomiak
n Campbell
EDITORIAL: CUP Dateline ‘ees dieses Bradley.
Office Manager:
Bassek. Production Manager: Joe Will.
lesk: Jim Rennie
- - Don Sellar
Associate Editor ........ Doug Walker
Page Five ‘h2.:).:ccus i
Fine Arts Editor ......
Photo Editor ..
Teartoonists Dale Drever, Peter
Peter Enns. Editorial Board: Don Sellar, Doug
Walker, Bruce Ferrier, Bill Miller, Linda Strand. Editorial Assistant: Carole Kaye. Librarian: Lois Berry.
STAFF THIS JSSUE—Workers for Monday’‘s paper are
Ba i ine Allison, Marion
rd Kottke, Bill Beard. Marien Fix, Peter Montgomery, The
iomgirt.
White Tornado, Mari rilyn Sellar, and yours truly,
Of course, they include John Westmore,
Conybeare, Gloria Skuba, Ralph Melny-
The Gateway is published daily this wee ek by the students’ union of the University of Alberta. The Eaitor-
ae -Chief is responsible for all miners published herein.
r Wednesday edition—7 p.m
ee anising—4: p.m. onday
—8;300. Authorized as second-class mail
postage in cash. Postage paid at Edmonto
Final_copy deadline (including short eat! ersh:
riday edition— esday,
p.
atverivia Manager: Alex Har. lardy. Office phone—433- 1155. ecieaiatien
y the Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for payment of
PAGE TWO
TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1966
5)
mr. pearson s panacea
The new Canadian parliamentary session
opens today in Ottawa, amid rumors of an
imaginative program of federal aid to uni-
versities. Political pundits are already fill-
ing the country’s daily newspapers with ma-
terial proclaiming the eventual arrival of
"free college education’’ in Canada. It is
significant, however, to note that these
writers have failed to define the term ‘free
education and have therefore contributed
to and mirrored a great public ignorance on
the subject.
For example, the Canadian Union of Stu-
dents has come out in favor of ‘’universal
accessibility: to post-secondary education’
with a secondary target involving the re-
moval of all tuition fees at Canadian uni-
versities. This stand has been interpreted
generally as one advocating
tion,’ when it does no such thing. Free
education, say CUS officials, is a goal
which involves the provision of books, trans-
portation to and from university, room-and-
board charges and living expenses in addi-
tion to free tuition.
Not even Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition
could provide students with such massive
aid. But what will the Pearson government
be willing to do for students?
One writer, Peter C. Newman, sees the
pl lala s legislative thrust in education
‘an imaginative program of federal aid
te universities,’’ which A
final major social initiative of a government
which has already given Canadians a uni-
versal pension plan and a labor code, has
launched the Canada assistance plan and a
war on poverty, and has a itself to
a national system of medicare
Basically, the new government education
program is believed to consist of massive
amounts of money channeled into bursaries
(on the basis of need) and scholarships (on
the basis of merit); increased per capita
grants to Canadian universities and colleges
from federal coffers and allocation of large
additional sums for federally-sponsored re-
search at universities. Such a program is
not only a good one to talk about on the
hustings—it is the kind of program which is
neither controversial nor difficult to push
through an ornery Commons.
Most of the government’s program, which
certainly does not show any sign of bringing
free education closer to reality, has appar-
ently come out of recommendations made
last October by the Bladen Commission on
port predicts that the current university en-
rolment of 178,200 will increase to 461,000
in the next ten years, and that in the same
period government aid to higher education
ould have to jump from $355 million to
w
~ $1,704 million.
The Libertal Party, like all the other poli-
tical parties in Canada, has been spurred
into action by alarming figures which plainly
show why the clearly provincial field of edu-
cation is one which requires federal interven-
tion and assistance.
University students across Canada will be
waiting eagerly today for the announcement
of Mr. Pearson's panacea for higher educa-
tion. Today's Speech from the Throne is a
document which could herald a new and en-
lightened approach to education in this
country.
ontario report analysis
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what's in mike’s bag for university students?
the label of hate
by bryan campbell
People are fighting, demonstrating, escal-
ating and dying in Vietnam.
Not a very world-shaking statement at
first glance—but there’s more to it than-a
first glance. People are the last thing any-
e@ mentions when they talk of Vietnam.
They talk of V.C., Communists, aggressors,
Capitalists, Imperialists—the list is endless.
Anything for a label, you can‘t nae without
a label.
According to Ue State prrereccn “White
Paper’’ of February 17, 1 o Chi Minh
is the leader sf the “Commu ane regime in
Hanoi’ and is behind the “‘infiltrators from
North Viet Nam who make up the vast ma-
jority of the so-called hard-core Viet Cong,
as well as accompanying terrorists, and es-
pionage and propaganda agents
The other side is no bet A rece
issue of World Student Noe cattle the Vick
television lectures modify learning process
by cliff will
reprinted from the mcmaster silhouette
Critics of the boob-tube beware—TV lec-
tures are here to stay.
This prediction is made in a 28-page re-
port prepared for the heads of Ontario’s
provincially-assisted eagle and col-
leges, and published in December. The
reason? Television ee offer advantages
to the direct system both quantitatively and
qualitatively.
The are obvious,
says the report. More students can be taught
by fewer instructors. The use of video-tape
oreatly increases the scope of the TV class-
evision offers a number of quali-
Cis advantages, especially in the fields of
science and medicine elicate ob-
servations as the staining of a slide, cer-
tain dental techniques or the scanning o
detailed graphs can be ne easily visible
to a large studio audienc
By 1970 there will x a shortage of
qualified professors in Canadian uni-
versities, says the report. About 8,300
full-time staff will be needed in all
Ontario universities in 1970-71. From
the present level of 3,700, the provin-
cially-assisted Ontario universities will
need between 600 and 900 additional
staff members each year. But only 190
:
Ph.D.s were granted in Ontario in
1963-64.
The purpose of television will then be to
“make optimum use of the talents of every
staff member who will be available. ele-
vision will also solve some of the problems
of increased enrolment, by enabling the
professor to give his lecture once and reach
the whole class, leaving more time to con-
duct seminars, meet students individually
and pursue his own research and supervision.
Television, says the report, seems to be a
practical way to have the very best lecturers
made available to all. It also supplies a help-
ful method to achieve uniformity of instruc-
tion, especially in introductory courses. The
use of videotape gives the additional ad-
vantage of being able to repeat lectures.
The report predicts the establishment of tape
libraries, where students may have explana-
tions and pees of Leda repeated.
The principle o
the report ies: ‘is aah accepted by
the academic community, though its applic-
ation to a widening spectrum of subjects is
moving through a cycle of initial resistance,
experimentation and evaluation.”
“The most serious doubts are based
on the fear that television may debase
the whole process of higher education.”
The fear is that the ‘‘professional
virtues of sincere and humble scholar-
_ shifted back to...
ship’’ may become overshadowed by
ig
universities themselves cou be
threatened if governments forced them
to use the medium against their judg-
ment.” ,
There is another fear, which has to do
with the place of the lecture in the learning
process. The report says: ‘’The extensive
use of television in universities might lead
to too great a stress on the lecture as a
teaching device.’ But with the use of video-
tape libraries, the lecture will become ‘‘sup-
plemental to, not the core of, teaching and
learning.”’
Thus the student’s role will change from
a passive one to one of active inquiry. ‘‘The
core of the learning process might . be
individual learning by
the student . . . aided by books and video-
tapes used to supplement his tutorials and
seminars.’
Television lectures, says the report, cause
a general improvement in teaching tech-
niques. Experience has shown “‘that lectures
pore for delivery on television are . .
ore compact, better eat fakes etter. it
lustrated and more ‘cared about
nam affair a ‘‘War of Atrocity” and lists
the evils of the ‘‘American aggressors’.
World Student News selects quotes to stir
hate. The magazine quotes one report to
the International Control Commission as fol-
lows:
“It (the report) specified among its com-
plaints ‘decapitations, eviserations and pub-
lic displays of murdered women and children
650, people | have been maimed by
firearms and torture,’
“‘Imperialists’; are behind it, accord-
The
‘ing to the World Student News
If you count carefully you will find 12
labels for hate inside the quotation marks.
A label is a peculiar thing. Once you
have labelled it you don’t have to think of
it in human terms. You are killing the
label and that’s easy. It’s not easy to kill
the man next door because you know him as
a person. A North Vietnamese is just a
Communist.
And to the North Vietnamese the Ameri-
can soldier is just an Imperialist aggressor
and easy to kill.
But it doesn’t stop there. Ho Chi Minh
and Lyndon Johnson are labels for hate. If
you take a stand on one side of the issue
one of these two ceases to be a person. For
the Americans, Ho Chi Minh is the epitomy
of the Communist tyrant. He is not unlike
Stalin or Castro or Hitler—even though Hit-
ler wasn’t a Communist—to the American
mind, Ho Chi Minh is Ne yo There is
nothing good about Ho Chi Minh.
Once he is labelled, Ho is automatically
opposed to every value in the Western way
of life. E
Lyndon Johnson undergoes the same trans-
formation in the minds of the other ‘side.
He stands for oppression, hate, slaughter and
murder. He carries the bomb, the gas, the
phosphorous explosives in his quick-draw
holster. :
- Remove the labels and look at Vietnam in
human terms—the picture changes surpris-
ingly.
In the light of day both these men have a
lot in common. | think they are both work-
ing for the same upc ice solution.
Ho Chi Minh is an old He has been
in politics since the late 1920s and he has
been fighting for the Vietnamese almost con-
tinuously. hi Minh has seen the Jap-
anese, the French and the Americans. Lyn-
don Johnson has a record stretching back in-
to the New Deal days of President Roosevelt.
Both are good men without the labels. |
hope good men don’t use labels too.
Traffic movements disrupted
in McMaster parking battle
HAMILTON (CUP) — McMaster
University students have taken to
the streets ay the current parking
fee ye her
A gro 6 oF ‘20 students early in
the pepatils of Jan. 10 blocked
parking lot entrances and attempt-
bd to disrupt their operation, al-
though University President H.
Thode announced that student
protests would a affect the ad-
wore S po.
(The ark- en” was organized
by. an ny committee of the
Students’ Representative Assembly
to protest parking conditions and
the recent imposition of a parking
ee.
Four student stalled their cars
in the entrance to the lots, but city
taken by an official, and recovered
it only by the efforts of his lawyer
later in the da
A tow truck, called to the sgl
its
was gierpers, to remove the
stalled on
Other eendents picketed entrance
ying fees with
ennies, cheques, and American
bills.
An attempt was made
to con-
tinue she protest Jan. 11, but police
acted quickly and toughly in the
near-zero weather and the attempt
ended after 20 minutes.
A campus secneteay was report-
ed to have rted drivers to
“run over” “demonstrator loch ing
their entrance to the lot
THE GATEWAY, Tuesday, January 18, 1966 3
Brief calls for wider coverage
By EKKEHARD KOTTKE
Students’ union has asked the
ore government to amend
e Treatment Services Act to pro-
vide better medical insurance for
stude:
Aa the act stands the government
is forced to discriminate against a
large sector of the student body.
The only students who benefit
from porone to students’ medi-
cal service: e the ones 19 years
of age-or Sa In addition they
must qualify as dependents on
family plans (MSI).
Older students must have resided
in Alberta for 12 months out of the
last 24 and be not principally de-
pendent en po persons for their
mainten:
Ina aabeilselore to the pr
ratdaie de
classified under a special category
ENGINEERING
GRADS
(Electrical, Mechanical & Physics)
Plan now fora
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BOTEL &
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Nowhere on the continent are there greater
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Register at your Student Placement Office for
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Interview Date: Feb. 2, 1966
for purposes of the Act.
The brief also emphasized the
limitations of the Student Health
Shaul ;
and students in
roper year-round coverage in-
volves eset ae expense to the
students, ok er.
The rie ‘presented average
hate ae earnings and disburse-
ments of post- ar neendy school
students and asked t
@the age limit of dependents
attending a post secondary school
be raise
@ all students paying fees toward a
Treatment Services Act, Alberta
Medical Plan.
The saisniauan was ‘made “not
considerations to which
other people in the province are
entitled.”
Short
DANCE CLUB
U_ of A Dance Club lessons begin to-
Nominations for next year's
75 cents.
ar, ‘‘Winter Waltz”, is
Feb. 4 at the Troc 59
s
ILARION CLUB
The meeting a ane for seen yd
is postponed until Jan. 7 p.m
ed bldg rm
instead ‘a all are invited to a “Yordon
Supper” tonight at St. Andrews Hall,
9831-75 St. pee 5:30 p.m
* e
a gad ta CLU
e U of i Flying Club will meet
Wednesday, 8 p.m. in
* *
PRE-MEDICAL ‘LECTURE
A pre-medical lecture for all students
Pp:
interested in icine will be given
Wednesday, 8 p.m. in room 2022 of thi
med sciences. bldg r J. Johnson
(surge eR “i - Sherbaniuk
(internal " medicine), Dr. L. Stayura
shorts
jpaediatrics), and Dr Ferguson
(obstetrics and gynaecology) will speak
on the medical course. Coffee will be
s e
SEMINAR APPLICATIONS
A Canadian Native Seminar will be
held campus Jan. 28-30. uest
speakers will deal with civil rights,
education, and religion of the tive
dian. Regsitration fee is $20. Any-
one interested shou apply in SUB
108 before Jan. Noe
vaiie ie NOTICE
ion annually presents
the ‘following awards to students both
versity life have been meritous:
to) rings; Silver A rings; Cols
ey blazers; Gold A pins; Silver
pin
Deserving students are asked to sub-
mit ipa: eted questionnaires before
noon, LE.
minations by two people on behalf
or an award are also
mn: an applications
should be addressed to the Awards
Committee and must be left in the
students’ union office
Tom Landsman,
Chairman
Awards Committee
The Player’s Jacket--—— fashioned by BANTAMAC in Terylene®, a Cel-Cil fibre. “Reg'd. Can. T.M. .
Come on over to smoothness
with no letdown in taste
Come on over to
New! -
Player's
Kings
4 THE GATEWAY, Tuesday, January 18, 1966
Pandas win as Bears lose
in double swim meet here
Curfew shall not ring tonight.
Down the mountain she whips,
wind in her face, snow
powdering behind her,
till she wheels into the valley
and stems to a stop.
The girl who doesn’t let
darkness deter her is not one
to hang up her ski poles
for a few days each month.
Like so many of today’s active
young moderns, she uses
Tampax menstrual tampons.
And finds that differences
in days of the month all but
vanish. A Tampax tampon
can’t bind, chafe, irritate—or
even be felt, when it’s in place.
Take Tampax tampons on
your next ski trip. You
may be glad you did.
Your choice of 3 absorbency
sizes (Regular, Super, Junior)
wherever such products
are sold.
rere 0 ©
eee
ae os
sow
woven a
oi
ne . 60
ee we
veloped by a doctor—
now ee Ke millions of women
TAMPAX INTERNAL SANITARY PROTECTION IS
ADE ONLY BY CANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORA-
TION LIMITED, BARRIE, ONT.
University of Alberta came up
with a win and a loss in the swim
meet against University of Saskat-
chewan here at the weekend.
Pandas outswam Huskiettes 66-
29 but Ai Bears lost 53-42 to the
Huskie:
Panda’ s Rae Edgar set a new pro-
vincial and conference record in
the 100 yard backstroke. Her time
of 1:08.6 was half a second lower
than the old one.
Saskatoon’ s Lawrence Smuk took
the men’s three meter diving with a
sparkling performance. halk-
unprecedented 217 points
outdistancing his nearest competit-
or by 36 points in the usually close
scoring event.
muk is no newcomer to the div-
ing scene; he placed third in the in-
door National Springboard cham- °
poner two weeks ago in Toron-
o. Stewart Robbins, Alberta’s div-
Ha coach who saw Smuk in Tor-
onto, says Smuk may take the Can-
adian ages tee this summer.
Smuk chalked up his win with a
series of difficult dives including a
forward one-and-one-half somer-
sault with double twist, a back one-
and-one-halfi in layout position.
and a reverse one-and-one-ha
But, despite Smuk’s ability, Rob-
bins says “nearly all Canadians
have a long way to go to beat the
Americans. They might not even be
able to make ihe calles squads.”
Bonnie Byrne, the only Panda
diver, won the women’s one meter
diving competition
Bears’ Bruce Stroud won the 100
aves freestyle in a ances race
ainst Saskatoon’s Tom Baillie.
Stroud’ time of 0:53.9 was cok best
he and coach Smit
epee to see him hit the confer-
ence record of 0:52.8 before the
year is out.
Diane Starr recorded her first
Teammate Susan Biggs
a close second in the
event.
Huskiette Colleen Walsh tied
with Panda Rae Edgar in the a
yard individual medley.
only 0.2 seconds off the provinetal
recor
Colleen iddepe one of Saska-
toon’s top swimmers, also took the
400 yard trocatyle and the 100 yard
butterfly events
The only other win for the Hus-
kiettes came when Marg Connor
won the 100 yard freestyle race.
Bear’s Stan Brown took the men’s
500 ie freestyle race just 0.6 sec-
onds ead of teammate Murray
McFadden.
Saditatoon' s Renee Robertson tied
with Bears’ Eric Thompson for first
place a the 100 yard breaststroke.
Ken Halliday was a triple winner
for the Huskies. He took the 100
yard butterfly and 200 yard indi-
vidual medley events. As well, he
swam on the Husky team that took
the 400 yard medley relay.
Coach Smith feels his team can
do better in the next meet by tak-
ing some of the good swimmers out
of the relay events and having
them swim individually.
ve
things 2
etter with
Oke
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Bears dump ecerant
By DON MOREN
A goal by Doug Bennett at 14:24
in the final period gave the Univer-
sity Junior Golden Bears a 5-4 vic-
tory over the Edmonton. Oil Kings
Junior B Redwings in hockey ac-
tion at the varsity arena Saturday.
e action was fast-moving with
plenty of solid Spetay by both sides
but, for ee most part, the game be-
longe Junior Bear squad.
The Sines Redwings were
mercilessly poke-checked in their
and outscrambled around
their goal.
Only brilliant net-minding by
goalie Jim Knox prevented a Bear
rout.
Fine passing and puck control
were the keys to the Bear attack.
e ~
Oo—r*
Last term I wrote a column on
the destruction of all the hair-
driers in the women’s locker room.
Carolyn is a second-
year phys ed student.
* *
“To the editor of Co-ed Corner
(in reference to Co-ed Corner of
Dec. 1):
“No one can deny that there de-
finitely has been misuse of equip-
ment in the women’s locker room
of the Physical Education a pullaing:
However, it must take so: magi-
nation to contrive that ne Laaonke
of the abuse was c used by Beople
who deliberately “set out” to de-
stroy expensive eae tt is
situation by carrying a nestles
in their purses at all tim
“
Many women will ES:
how ae locks progressed chee four
screws to two screws to one sc
until they finally fell off ihe door.
“Referring to the statement that
you do not think the women de-
SENIOR CLASS
GRADUATION COMMITTEE
Applications for the positions of
chairman and members of
Senior Class Graduation Committee
will be received from studen
graduating in 1966. Inquiries should
be addressed to Mau
Stuart, Chairman, Personnel Board:
The Junior Bear defense, lead by
goalie Dale Halterman, turned in
a standout
costly penalties compared with one
or the Bears
Bear marksmen were Dan Pahl,
Jim Seutter and Dan Dunnigan)
with one each and Doug Bennett
who picked up two.
from the hard-charging Junior
It ube ee the best
ame of the s
FOr 24 fang tended the game.
SS aaoesasF5
’ Co-Ed ‘Corner
by Marion Conybeare
SDS ODS EADS ORE
serve hair driers, it has been the
mistake of pe f
tion for the public, aft
i d
there are the Fela rth Education
men who mstitute but a
minute fraction BG the people who
use the driers each day.
“This year there are more than
n in physical ed-
to do with the facilities last year.
The third- -year women do not even
have swimming.
“It is the purpose of the press to
point out these uncalled-for abuses
of facilities, but it is certainly un-
fair to conclude statements of fact
mber correctly
ys ed were the ones who
most of the commotion.
from
hands nee ndiod the ae and
used the toilets every
“The majority of us are proud of
the Physical Education building
and it was originally because of
this pride that jour request for re-
pair was made’
ALBERTA
Programmers
Interview Dates:—
PROVINCE OF
EMPLOYMENT INTERVIEWS
For 1966 Graduates in the following fields:
Personnel Administration Officers
Water Resources Engineers
Labour Research Officers
Museum Personnel
Agricultural Instructors
Land Appraisers (Summer Employment)
Social Workers (Permanent and Summer
January 18 to February 2, 1966. Please consult
your university recruiting office for specific times.
Emplyoment)